This disclosure relates to foam dispensers and in particular to dispensers that may have a resiliently deformable dome piston and dispensers that may have an improved mixing chamber.
The present disclosure relates to foam dispensers and more specifically non-aerosol foam dispensers or unpressurized foam dispensers. The popularity of these type of foam dispensers has increased dramatically over the last decade and they are now used widely throughout the world. The advantage of foam dispensers over conventional liquid dispensers is that they use substantially less liquid for each use or shot. For example if the foam dispenser is being used for hand hygiene either as a soap dispenser or an alcohol foam dispenser, each hand cleansing event uses substantially less liquid than would be used with a straight liquid dispenser.
However, there are always opportunities for reducing the cost of production, whether that be by way of reducing the number of parts or simplifying the manufacturing process. As well there are opportunities for improving the quality of the foam or in the alternative producing a commercially acceptable foam in a device that may be produced at a reduced cost.
A foam assembly connectable to a liquid container includes a main pump body, a piston dome, an air chamber, a liquid chamber, a mixing zone and a porous member. The main pump body has an exit nozzle. The piston dome is attached to the main pump body, whereby the piston dome is a resiliently deformable piston dome and has an at rest position and a depressed position. The air chamber is defined by the piston dome and the main pump body. The liquid chamber is defined by the piston dome and the main pump body and has a liquid inlet valve and a liquid outlet valve. The mixing zone is in flow communication with the air chamber and is in flow communication with the liquid chamber. The porous member is in the exit nozzle downstream of the mixing zone. The volume of the air chamber and volume of the liquid chamber is dependent on the position of piston dome and during an activation stroke the piston moves from the at rest position to the depressed position and responsively the volume of the air chamber and the volume of the liquid chamber are reduced.
A foam dispenser includes a liquid container; a main pump body, a piston dome, an air chamber, a liquid chamber, a mixing zone and a porous member. The main pump body has an exit nozzle. The piston dome is attached to the main pump body, whereby the piston dome is a resiliently deformable piston dome and has an at rest position and a depressed position. The air chamber is defined by the piston dome and the main pump body. The liquid chamber is defined by the piston dome and the main pump body and has a liquid inlet valve and a liquid outlet valve. The mixing zone is in flow communication with the air chamber and is in flow communication with the liquid chamber. The porous member is in the exit nozzle downstream of the mixing zone. The volume of the air chamber and volume of the liquid chamber is dependent on the position of piston dome and during an activation stroke the piston moves from the at rest position to the depressed position and responsively the volume of the air chamber and the volume of the liquid chamber are reduced.
The main pump body may include a main pump body portion and a liquid and air bore. The liquid inlet valve may be integrally formed in the liquid and air bore. The liquid and air bore may further include an air path integrally formed therein wherein the air path extends between the air chamber and the mixing zone.
The foam assembly may further include an air inlet valve in flow communication with the liquid container. The air inlet valve may be integrally formed in the liquid and air bore.
The mixing zone may include an elongate mixing channel and the mixing channel may have an upstream end and a downstream end and the liquid chamber may be in flow communication with the upstream end of mixing channel via the liquid outlet valve. The foam assembly may further include a chamfer at the downstream end of the mixing channel whereby the chamfer expands in a downstream direction. The mixing channel may further include a plurality of air ports spaced downstream from the upstream end of the mixing channel.
The foam assembly may further include a mixing tube and the mixing channel and chamfer may be formed in the mixing tube. Further the air ports may also be formed in the mixing tube. There may be a plurality of air ports. The plurality of air ports may be four air ports equally spaced around the mixing channel. The plurality of air ports may be two air ports equally spaced around the mixing channel.
The foam assembly may further include one foam tube wherein the foam tube has a porous member attached to one end thereof. The foam tube may have a second porous member attached to the other end thereof. The foam assembly may further include a second foam tube wherein the second foam tube has a porous member attached to one end thereof.
The liquid container may be an upright liquid container, an inverted liquid container, an inverted pouch, or an upright pouch.
The mixing zone may include at least one air port upstream of the elongate mixing channel.
The foam dispenser may include a dispenser housing having a push bar for engaging the piston dome.
A mixing tube for use in a foam assembly having an air chamber and a liquid chamber and a means for pressurizing the air chamber and the liquid chamber includes an elongate mixing channel and an exit zone. The elongate mixing channel has an upstream end and a downstream end. The exit zone is at the downstream end of the mixing channel whereby the exit zone chamfer expands in a downstream direction.
The exit zone may be a chamfer that expands in a downstream direction.
The elongate mixing channel and the exit zone may form an elongate venturi tube.
The mixing tube may include at least one air port in the elongate mixing channel and the air port is in flow communication with the air chamber.
The air port may be a plurality of air ports spaced around the mixing channel.
A foam assembly connectable to a liquid container includes a pump, a mixing zone and a porous member. The pump has an air chamber and a liquid chamber. The pump has an activation stroke wherein the pump moves from an at rest position to a compressed position and a return stroke wherein the pump moves from the compressed position to an at rest position. The volume of the air chamber and liquid chamber are each substantially smaller in the compressed position. The mixing zone is in flow communication with the air chamber and in flow communication with the liquid chamber. The mixing zone has an elongate mixing channel having a cross sectional area and an exit zone downstream of the elongate mixing channel. The exit zone has a cross sectional area larger than the mixing channel cross sectional area, The porous member is downstream of the mixing zone.
The exit zone may be a chamfer that expands in a downstream direction.
The elongate mixing channel and the exit zone together may form an elongate venturi tube.
At least one air port may be formed in the elongate mixing channel and each air port is in flow communication with the air chamber. The at least one air port may be a plurality of air ports spaced around the elongate mixing channel.
The volume of the liquid chamber to the air chamber may be between 1:2 and 1:50.
The volume of the liquid chamber to the air chamber may be between 1:8 and 1:9
Further features will be described or will become apparent in the course of the following detailed description.
The foam dispenser and improved mixing chamber will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
The pump has an activation stroke wherein the pump moves from an at rest position to a compressed position and a return stroke wherein the pump moves from the compressed position to an at rest position. The volume of the air chamber and liquid chamber are each substantially smaller in the compressed position. The foaming assembly 14 has an air chamber 16 in flow communication with a mixing zone 19 and a liquid chamber 20 in flow communication with the mixing zone 19. The liquid chamber 20 is in flow communication with the liquid container 12 and has a liquid inlet valve 22. A liquid outlet valve 24 is between the liquid chamber and the mixing zone 19.
In one embodiment the foaming assembly 14 includes a main pump body 28 and a piston dome 30. The main pump body 28 includes a liquid and air bore 32 which is a press fit into the main pump body portion 29, as best seen in
In the embodiment shown herein the liquid container is an upright liquid container 12. The liquid and air bore 32 includes an air inlet valve 26 which is a one way valve that allows air to enter into the liquid container 12. When the liquid and air bore 32 is press fit into the main pump body portion 29, the air inlet valve 26 is deflected to bias it closed. The air inlet valve 26 flexes open when the pressure in the bottle reaches a predetermined pressure such that the liquid container will not collapse. A mating cup 40 is formed in the main pump body portion 29 and a seal off feature 42 formed in the air inlet valve 26 is sealingly seated in the mating cup until the pressure in the liquid container 12 is over a predetermined pressure.
In one embodiment, the main pump body portion 29 has an exit nozzle 44 formed therein as best seen in
An embodiment of the mixing tube 18 is shown in
In the embodiment shown herein there are four airports. However, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the number of air ports may vary. In the embodiment shown herein air ports 54 are spaced around the central elongate mixing channel. Accordingly in use air is injected from four sides into the stream of liquid passing through the elongate mixing channel.
A foam tube 62 with at least one porous member 63 is positioned in the exit nozzle 44 such that the porous member is downstream of the elongate mixing channel 50. A foam tube 62 is press fit downstream of the mixing tube 18. The foam tube is tapered such that the downstream end has a smaller diameter than the upstream end. Alternatively the foam tube 62 could have a parallel bore. The foam tube may have a porous member 63 attached to one or both ends thereof.
The porous member may be mesh, gauze, foam, sponge or other suitable porous material and may be the same gauge or a larger gauge upstream of a smaller gauge. Accordingly the user may tailor their choice of porous member to the type and characteristics of the liquid.
The piston dome 30 operably attached to the main pump body whereby it is retained between the main pump body portion 29 and the liquid and air bore 32. The piston dome has a liquid piston portion 35 which sealingly fits inside the liquid chamber 20 and slides up and down in the liquid chamber to change the volume of the liquid chamber 20 responsive to the movement of the piston dome 30. The piston dome 30 is resiliently deformable such that once it has been depressed the profile and material of the piston dome will return to its at rest position without the need for a spring. The liquid and air bore 32 and piston dome 30 together define the air chamber 16 whereby when the piston dome 30 is pushed inwardly the volume of the air chamber 16 is reduced.
The foam dispenser 10 also includes a transit cap 66 which is press fit onto the exterior of the exit nozzle 44 as best seen in
In use the piston dome 30 is compressed and air from the air chamber 16 is pushed through the air path 38 into the outer annular air channel 58 through air ports 54 and into the central elongate mixing channel 50 in mixing tube 18 as shown in
As can be seen in
An alternate foam dispenser 70 is shown in
The main pump body portion 76 includes a liquid channel 79 which is in flow communication with the liquid chamber 20. The upstream end of the liquid channel 79 includes a valve seat 80. The liquid inlet valve 22 is seated on the valve seat 80 and biased in the closed position.
The flow of air and liquid through the foaming assembly 74 when the piston dome 30 is compressed is shown in
Inverted liquid container 72 is a collapsible container. Thus in this embodiment the foaming assembly 74 need not contain an air inlet and air inlet valve that is in flow communication with the liquid container.
Another alternate foam dispenser 90 is shown in
Foam dispenser 90 includes foaming assembly 95 with a main pump body portion 96 which has a connector portion 98 which connects to pouch connector 94. Connector portion 98 includes a valve seat 100 and the liquid inlet valve 22 is seated on the valve seat 100 and biased in the closed position, Pouch connector 94 has a liquid channel 102 which when the pouch connector 94 is connected to the connector portion 98 of the main pump body portion 96 is in flow communication with liquid chamber 20.
The flow of air and liquid through the foaming assembly 90 when the piston dome 30 is compressed is shown in
The mixing tube 18 or alternate embodiments of the mixing tube may be used in other foam dispensers. Any foam dispenser that has an air chamber, a liquid chamber and a means for pressurizing the air chamber and liquid chamber may be modified to incorporate the mixing tube shown herein. An example of a prior art foam assembly for a dispenser is shown in
Referring to
The foam dispenser includes a foaming assembly 111 with an air chamber 118 and a liquid chamber 120. The air chamber 118 is in flow communication with the central elongate mixing channel 114 through air ports 116. The liquid chamber 120 is in flow communication with the central elongate mixing channel 114 at the upstream end of the elongate mixing channel. At the downstream end of the central elongate mixing channel 114 there is a chamfer 122. An upstream or first 124 and a downstream or second 126 foam tube are in the exit nozzle 128 downstream of the mixing tube 112. Each foam tube 124, 126 has a porous member attached thereto. Alternatively there may be one foam tube with a porous member attached to each end thereof. Accordingly the second foam tube has 126 a second foam tube porous member attached thereto. Typically the upstream porous member has larger holes than the downstream porous member. The inside diameter of the upstream foam tube 124 is generally the same as the downstream end of the chamfer 122. It has been observed that in the configuration shown in
An alternate embodiment of the foaming assembly 131 and an alternate mixing tube 130 is shown in
Mixing tube 130 is similarly for use in a modified foam dispenser that is similar to the foam dispenser shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,082,586. Mixing tube 130 is similar to mixing tube 112 described above with a central elongate mixing channel 132 and an exit zone which herein is a chamfer 134. In this embodiment there are no air ports in the mixing tube 130 per se, rather the liquid and the air is mixing together up stream of the mixing tube 130. The elongate mixing channel 132 and the chamfer 134 together form an elongate venturi tube.
The foam dispenser includes a foaming assembly with an air chamber 118 and a liquid chamber 120. Liquid chamber 120 has an exit valve 136 which controls the flow of the liquid into a mixing chamber 138. Air chamber 118 has an outlet port 140 into mixing chamber 138. Mixing chamber 138 is upstream of mixing tube 130. Mixing chamber 138 is in flow communication with the central elongate mixing channel 132 at the upstream end of the mixing tube 130. At the downstream end of the central elongate mixing channel 114 there is a chamfer 122. An upstream 124 and a downstream 126 foam tube are in the exit nozzle 128 downstream of the mixing tube 130. The inside diameter of the upstream foam tube 124 is generally the same as the downstream end of the chamfer 134.
Referring to
This foam assembly may be modified in a similar fashion as described above. For example it could be modified by inserting a mixing tube similar to those described above. Alternatively the foaming assembly 151 could be modified as shown in
It has been observed that the mixing tubes 18, 112 and 130, and the central elongate mixing channel 150 combines the air and liquid in a more turbulent manner as compared to the prior art. it was observed that a ratio of 0.75 ml of liquid to 14.2 ml air yields a theoretical ratio of 1:18.9 but in the prior art device similar to that shown in
It will be appreciated that the embodiments of foam dispensers shown herein may be used in association with a dispenser housing wherein the dispenser housing includes a push bar assembly that engages the piston dome by moving the push bar assembly enables the activation stroke of the piston dome. Further, the push bar may be activated manually or automatically wherein a motion sensor is operatively connected to the push bar assembly such that motion within a predetermined range of the motion sensor will activate the push bar assembly. An example of this is shown in
Generally speaking, the systems described herein are directed to foam dispensers and improved insert. As required, embodiments of the foam dispenser and improved insert are disclosed herein. However, the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary, and it should be understood that the foam dispenser and improved insert may be embodied in many various and alternative forms. The Figures are not to scale and some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular elements while related elements may have been eliminated to prevent obscuring novel aspects. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the foam dispenser and improved mixing chamber. For purposes of teaching and not limitation, the illustrated embodiments are directed to foam dispensers.
As used herein, the terms “comprises” and “comprising” are to be construed as being inclusive and opened rather than exclusive. Specifically, when used in this specification including the claims, the terms “comprises” and “comprising” and variations thereof mean that the specified features, steps or components are included. The terms are not to be interpreted to exclude the presence of other features, steps or components.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2013/056901 | 4/2/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13458318 | Apr 2012 | US |
Child | 14383388 | US |